Praise for The Gospel According to Billy the Kid
“In this breezy, alternative history of the Lincoln County War and the outlaw we know as William H. Bonney, first-time author Dennis McCarthy has fun with the counterfactual claims of Brushy Bill Roberts in 1950. It’s a fast, entertaining read.”
—RON HANSEN, author of The Kid and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
“Just when you think you’ve read everything that could be written about Billy the Kid, Dennis McCarthy has come up with an engaging, inventive, and unique take on the outlaw legend. Sit back, smile, and enjoy the ride.”
—JOHNNY D. BOGGS, author of Return to Red River
“Both propulsive and poignant, McCarthy’s fresh take on the Billy the Kid legend is both a compelling tale of the old West and an engaging study of one of its most enduring characters.”
—C. JOSEPH GREAVES, author of Hard Twisted: A Novel
“The Gospel According to Billy the Kid has the pace of a mountain river, moving with a similar power and inevitably toward its destination, yet like a mountain river, Dennis McCarthy’s novel has depths that lead us toward profound questions of culpability, forgiveness, and grace, and what realms may lie beyond this world. This novel does what all of the best ones do: we enter them, but they also enter us, and they stay.”
—RON RASH, author of In the Valley and Serena: A Novel
The Gospel According to Billy the Kid
THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
BILLY
THE KID
A Novel
Dennis McCarthy
© 2021 by Dennis McCarthy
All rights reserved. Published 2021
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 978-0-8263-6235-3 (paper)
ISBN 978-0-8263-6236-0 (electronic)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file with the Library of Congress.
Cover illustration: adapted from photograph by Ben Wittick, ca. 1879
Designed by Felicia Cedillos
To my beloved Judy and
my friend and mentor Peter Josyph,
my most dedicated readers
Doubts of all things earthly, and intuitions of some things heavenly; this combination makes neither believer nor infidel, but makes a man who regards them both with equal eye.
—HERMAN MELVILLE, Moby-Dick
Acknowledgments
This book is a work of fiction. Like Pat Garrett’s The Authentic Life of Billy the Kid it is largely a product of the author’s imagination. Some of the episodes are based on fact, just as the stories in The Authentic Life are based on fact. Eyewitnesses to the historic events, however, told different versions of what they saw, and records that historians might reasonably rely upon are sketchy at best. While we know a fair amount about the Lincoln County War, which provided the background for the rise and fall of Billy the Kid, we know very little about Billy himself. We don’t know where or when he was born. We don’t know for certain when he died. We don’t even know his real name.
The Gospel According to Billy the Kid is my first novel. As it turned out, I needed help. I sent different drafts to various friends along the way. And there were many drafts. I lost count a long time ago. My wife Judy read the first draft. Judy has always been my first editor throughout my personal and professional life. Gratefully, Judy was kind and tolerant and she gave me incentive to forge ahead.
Deborah Scaperoth read an early draft and helped with structural problems. Readers of later drafts provided encouragement and corrected gaffes and inaccuracies or recommended deleting sections that people will skip anyway. Some pointed out lacunae or suggested topics that clarified the text or made images more vivid. Tom Poland told me that rattlesnakes smell like burnt sugar, and Allen Josephs corrected Billy’s Spanish. My editor at the University of New Mexico Press, Stephen Hull, took a chance on an unknown author and gave me valuable guidance in bringing the book to press.
To all of them I am indebted: Terry Chilcoat, Angie Corbett-Kuiper, Steve Davis, Mike Evans, Paulo Faria, Laurence Gonzales, Chuck Grieves, Stephen Hull, Jon Jefferson, Allen Josephs, Peter Josyph, Brother Leander, Cormac McCarthy, Judy McCarthy, Desley Pendergast, Tom Poland, Deborah Scaperoth, Greg Tinsley, and Amanda Urban. There was a long gestation period for this project, and I’ve undoubtedly left out some readers. I apologize to them. If I’d written this story thirty years earlier I wouldn’t have been so forgetful.
Of all my readers the one to whom I owe the greatest debt is Peter Josyph. Peter goaded me into the project, encouraged me throughout, was my second most merciless editor, right after my brother Cormac, and taught me the most. Thanks, pal.
PROLOGUEAugust 1914
Cowboys are good-hearted and kind, sympathetic and not looking for trouble if it can be avoided, but nevertheless, when nothing but trouble will do, you have struck the right party when you strike the average cowboy.
—JAMES EMMIT MCCAULEY, A Stove-Up Cowboy’s Story
YOU DON’T REMEMBER ME, DO you? The San Carlos Reservation? We both had more hair back then. You were scouting for the army. I’d quit a job at Fort Grant and was headed to the White Mountains. We went hunting together along the Gila, and you shot the biggest mule deer I’ve ever seen. We were hauling it back to San Carlos when we ran into Gerónimo. He’d run off the reservation with a bunch of his boys. I was glad you spoke Apache.
I’ve thought a lot about you since. Mostly because of your brother Carlos. He saved my life. Wasn’t for him I wouldn’t be here. I’d be buried back of some Mexican whorehouse, my throat cut. Or gutshot stealing cattle. Or bushwhacked on the Spanish Trail and carried off by coyotes.
I’ve knowed scores of fine men over the years but none like Carlos. He was extraordinary. Most likely you don’t remember him much. You were pretty young when he left home.
I’m glad I finally ran into you again. Wasn’t sure I ever would. I found your brother’s diary after he died and I’ve been carrying it around ever since. It’s unusual for a diary. He talks more about what he thought than what he did. I’ve read it probably a dozen times. Believe he’d want you to have it.
Like to tell you about your brother. What I knew anyway. Don’t know where to begin except at the beginning, before I met Carlos. It’ll help you understand why he means so much to me. It started with the Lincoln County War. Might take most of the afternoon. If you’re up to it, whiskey’s on me.
Hear tell I was famous but I don’t know that ole boy. He’s a product of Pat Garrett’s imagination. Him and Ash Upson. They say I killed twenty-one men? Not if they’re talking about hombres I knew. It was five. I’ve shot at others but don’t know if I hit any. If you want to include Comanches and Spaniards during wartime, I may of killed twenty-one. I’m a fair shot and hombres fell when I pulled the trigger, but I wasn’t the only fool shooting. Ain’t no claiming credit for killing in war anyway.
I ain’t proud of killing the ones I knew. At the time I told myself they deserved it, or they didn’t give me no choice. I’ve learned to live with most of it. The first one though was my own doing. Joe Grant. I was a banty rooster and he tried to clip my spurs. We were in Bob Hargrove’s saloon in Fort Sumner. We’d been drinking. Joe more’n me. He bet me a double eagle he’d kill a man before I did. I already had a reputation. Folks’d heard stories. Like one about me killing a blacksmith in Fort Grant. Wasn’t true but I never denied it. I knew what Joe was thinking. Considered ignoring him, but Joe was a bad drunk. I should of walked away. Would of today.
I was working on the Chisum ranch on the Pecos. Me and two of Chisum’s Jinglebob hands were at the bar when Joe cha
llenged me to the bet. Then he lifted an ivory-handle six-shooter from the holster of one of the hands and replaced it with his own Colt with wooden grips. The cowboy was savvy enough to let it slide, but I was a sucker for the challenge. I reached over and lifted the six-shooter from Joe’s holster.
“Nice pistol you got there, Joe,” I said as I twirled it on my finger. “Bit fancy though, even for you.”
I spun the cylinder and handed it back. He slapped it in his holster. I turned and walked away.
What Joe didn’t know was that the cowboy’d fired twice at a jackrabbit coming into Fort Sumner. He hadn’t reloaded. When I spun the cylinder I made sure the next shot’d land on an empty case.
“Fancy pissant ain’t ye,” Joe said to my back.
When I heard the hammer snap I spun round and ripped three shots into Joe’s chin. He fell backward, dropping the six-shooter. I picked it up and handed it to its owner.
Joe was right. I was a pissant. I baited him into drawing. Never done that before or since. It still bothers me.
Not the three shots though. You could of covered them with the double eagle I never collected.
I was an outlaw. Not a bandido, just an outlaw. No more’n most men. It was hard not to be an outlaw back in them days. You know how it was. Wasn’t much alternative. No real law. The governor, sheriff, politicians—all of them crooks. The rest of us were shoestringers, trying to take back what the bigwigs stole from us. It says somewhere we hang the small thieves and appoint the big ones to office. Sounds about right.
My boss John Tunstall wasn’t no outlaw. His lawyer Mac McSween might of been but I doubt it. The Lincoln County War started when Mac didn’t divvy up a dead man’s insurance money the way some folks thought he should. They say Mac stole the money. I don’t know. He seemed too God-fearing for a thief. Lots of God-fearing men are thieves but Mac’s religion was real. I doubt anyone but Mac knew for sure. Maybe not even him. His wife Sue might of knowed. She once said that when her and Mac left Kansas, headed out here, Mac owed some hombre three hundred dollars that he never paid.
So here’s the gospel story. Gospel as I know it anyway. Memory’s a funny thing. It’ll fool you. One of my early memories was seeing my pa coming home to Buffalo Gap with Quantrill after a raid in Kansas. I can see the two of them now coming through the high grass, as clear as I’m standing there. Pap rode with Quantrill alright, but he never brought him to Buffalo Gap. That don’t change my memory none.
Buffalo Gap’s where I come from. It’s in Taylor County now. Was just Texas back then.
The things I’m gonna tell you happened thirty, thirty-five years ago. I ain’t sure about dates. To most folks back then—especially farmers and ranchers—seasons were important. Today, tomorrow, and next week were important, but only for a few days. Folks didn’t pay much mind to dates. Lots of folks didn’t know how old they were. I ain’t sure myself.
My story begins on February 18, 1878. You’re probably wondering how I remember that date. It’s one I don’t aim to forget. It’s the day John Tunstall died.
CHAPTER 1The Río Feliz Ranch
He is, in all, quite a handsome fellow, the only imperfection being two prominent front teeth slightly protruding like squirrels’ teeth, and he has agreeable and winning ways.
—The Santa Fe Gazette, DECEMBER 1880
“HEY, BISCUIT BOY. GET YOUR butt out of bed.”
Dick Brewer kicked my bunk.
“Gauss ain’t here. You’re doing breakfast. We’ve got work to do. John wants us and Rob to run the horses and mules to my ranch, then head to Lincoln for supplies. Rob’s rounding up the stock.”
“Ain’t nobody built a fire in this barn?” I said, pulling a quilt over my head.
My cot was in a corner of the bunkhouse furthest from the fireplace. The bunkhouse was a dirt-floor jacal. The chimney was the only clue that chickens didn’t live there. The last cowhand had banked the fire before bedding down for the night. By morning only a few coals remained. The cup of coffee beside my cot was rock solid. The sun was up but hardly any light seeped through the shuttered windows. Of course the cold had no problem. It could seep through the windows and door and walls too. When it snowed, flakes rode in on the wind.
“The quicker you shed that bedroll the quicker your blood’ll flow,” Dick said. “Me and Rob’s done half a day’s work while you’ve been dreaming about your girl. How you lay in bed after first light’s a mystery to me.”
“Ain’t my girl,” I said. “Been dreaming about Aunt Cat. She was wearing a long dress, like a wedding gown, only it was black. She was holding a dead raven by its feet. You think dreams mean something?”
“I think your aunt’s telling you that if you don’t get your sorry ass out of bed, Billy Bonney, you’ll be crow meat for John.”
Billy Bonney’s the name I was using back then. Aunt Cat was born in Belfast. She raised me after my folks was killed by Comanches. She called me her bonny Billy. I flipped the name around. I was the youngest of John Tunstall’s hands. Except for John’s old cook, Dad Gauss, the hands weren’t much more than boys. Henry Brown was a year or two older than me. The rest—Fred Waite, John Middleton, Rob Widenmann, Dick Brewer—were in their twenties. John too.
Fred was my closest friend among the hands. He was part Chickasaw. He grew up in Indian Territory. He was smart and had a college education. After the Lincoln ruckus he went back to Indian Territory and became attorney general of the Chickasaw Nation. I reckon he’s still there. I ran into him once in Oklahoma City when I was in Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He’d looked me up.
Money was Henry Brown’s undoing. He’d worked for Lawrence Murphy for a year before going to work for John. He quit Murphy because he never got paid. Then when John got killed, he lost his wages again. Eventually he became a marshal in Medicine Lodge, Kansas. I reckon marshaling didn’t pay much neither because he robbed the local bank. Got caught trying to get out of town. A lynch mob killed him the next day.
Don’t know for sure what happened to Middleton. He took a bullet at Blazer’s Mill and nearly died. I’ll tell you about that in a moment. He drifted away afterward. I heard he died of smallpox near Silver City a few years later, but Fred said he drowned in Kansas about the time Henry was killed.
Rob Widenmann was a strange bird. A blowhard and a liar, but folks liked him. John made him administrator of his estate. When John got killed, Rob thought being administrator meant he got the ranch. He met a peculiar end. I’ll tell you about that later too. It’s quite a story.
Dick Brewer was the best of us. He was John’s foreman. A hard worker with a good heart. He had a girl back East. After he bought a ranch on the Ruidoso he asked her to come live with him. He bought a load of pecan wood from Texas and built her a bed. A rattler bit her soon after she arrived and she died in that bed. Dick took it apart and made a coffin of it. He buried her out back where he could watch over her from the bedroom window. I’ll tell you about his undoing when I get to Blazer’s MIll.
John Tunstall, our boss, was an Englishman, born in London a few years before the War between the States. His family was rich. They owned mercantiles in London and British Columbia. John’d worked in the British Columbia store. I believe it was in Victoria. Something happened. John could of been the cause. I got the impression his pa was looking to him to restore whatever the family lost. That’s why he came to Lincoln and bought the ranch on the Río Feliz. He saw a new country brimming with promise.
When John got to Lincoln he met Mac McSween. They were both smart, well educated, quick to be compadres. They opened a store together in Lincoln. Mac was a lawyer. He kept an office in the store.
John was different from us hands. He was different from anyone I ever knew. He was blind in one eye and looked at you cockeyed. Talked like he had a spoke up his ass. He wore English riding britches that stuck out on the sides like wings. He had the prettiest Arabian bay you ever saw. When he sat that bay with his hand-tooled English saddle, hand-tooled riding boots, w
inged britches, cutaway coat, he was a sight. He was great to work for. Treated me like a brother. One of the best men I ever knew.
John had near four thousand acres on the head of the Río Feliz and four hundred head of cattle. He lived in a stone choza a chicken run from the bunkhouse. Wasn’t much. Three rooms strung in a line. He slept in one end of the house. The kitchen was in the other. He planned to build a ranch house but Dolan’s boys squashed that idea.
The ranch was mostly hill country with barely enough grama to starve a lazy cow. The hills were peppered with piñons and junipers. Cottonwoods lined the Feliz. It was hardly a river. You could walk across it in places without getting your boots wet. It ran a couple of miles through the draws before leaving the ranch. Mostly, the ranch needed water. Hadn’t rained since late summer and folks said the winter snow was the poorest in memory.
The hands ate in John’s house. I was cook whenever Gauss was gone. I’d learned to cook in a grub house outside Fort Grant. That was before I met you on the San Carlos. The boys groused and groaned if I was cooking, but I put out a good feed and they knew it.
That morning I dragged out of bed in my long johns and got dressed. I grabbed my coat and hat and stepped outside. My nose froze in the morning air. The sun was half an hour above the hill east of the bunkhouse. The sky was jaybird blue and cloudless. A perfect day.
When I got to John’s kitchen a fire was waiting in the stove. John’s Russian wolfhound, Benedick, was curled up beside it. He raised his head and wagged his tail when I came in. I fixed biscuits, huevos rancheros, rashers, frijoles refritos, and coffee. I tossed Benedick a rasher and a biscuit then rang the bell outside. John and the hands came in and sat at the table.
“Why’re we going to Lincoln?” one of the hands asked. Lincoln was a two-day ride trailing stock.
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